[sorry - I meant The combination of MarkItUp and **Markmin** is excellent.]

On 5 November 2010 09:30, Tom Atkins <[email protected]> wrote:

> I'm very happy about Markmin! I've used Markdown for years for creating
> eLearning resources and blogging.
>
> I have tried to get 'normal' users to use Markdown (Markmin would be the
> same) and it's not easy.  Non-techy people will not use inline markup!  So
> an editor like MarkItUp is essential.
>
> The combination of MarkItUp and Markdown is excellent.  Add web2py to the
> mix and Massimo has created a winner in my opinion! (I've created a combined
> blog / wiki using plugin_wiki and it works great.)
>
> But I reiterate - don't try and teach a markup language (however simple) to
> non technical users - you will lose them in seconds!
>
>
> On 4 November 2010 22:27, rochacbruno <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I am a markmin fan, I wrote An. Entire book in markmin.
>>
>> Very rapid
>>
>> Enviado via iPhone
>>
>> Em 04/11/2010, às 20:15, Christopher Steel <[email protected]>
>> escreveu:
>>
>> > We love Markmin. It is tiny, easy to use and logical. It is similar to
>> > Markdown which is pretty nice, but Markmin covers what people actually
>> > use in a way that makes markup look good in itself.
>> >
>> > As an added bonus it is totally readable as a text file so everyone,
>> > including one of our board members who happens to be blind, can edit,
>> > create and update markmin documents.
>> >
>> > I think it has world changing possibilities...
>> >
>> > and Massimo(?) just posted an example app ->
>> http://www.web2py.com/markmin
>> >
>> >
>> > On Nov 4, 3:20 pm, Luther Goh Lu Feng <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >> Has anyone had experience implementing markin as part of text area
>> >> input? Do end users find markmin difficult? Personally, I find it very
>> >> user friendly, especially withhttp://www.web2py.com/markminBut then
>> >> again, I am a biased developer.
>> >>
>> >> Any feedback on this?
>>
>
>

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